“Probably not right away,” I admitted. “Trauma doesn’t heal on a schedule. But it will get better. Therapy helps. Time helps. And knowing he’s locked up helps.”
“I still have nightmares,” she confessed. “That we’re back in the car. That he’s coming to take Tyler.”
“Those are just nightmares,” I said firmly. “The reality is that you are here. You won. You survived.”
“We won,” she corrected.
“We won,” I agreed.
“I keep thinking about other women,” Jess said, looking out at the street. “Women who don’t have a sister in the FBI. Women who believe the lies. Who’s fighting for them?”
I looked at her—the teacher, the survivor, the mother.
“Maybe you could,” I said. “Someday. When you’re ready. You have a powerful story, Jess.”
She nodded slowly, a thoughtful expression on her face. “Maybe. Not yet. But maybe someday.”
We sat in comfortable silence, listening to the crickets. A year ago, my sister had been a ghost in a soup kitchen line. Now, she was solid, real, and safe.
Justice had been served. The ledger was balanced. But the real victory wasn’t in the court documents or the prison sentences. It was in the laughter of a little boy running through the grass, unafraid of the dark.
And that was a victory worth fighting for.
